Toyoda, grandson of company founder Kiichiro Toyoda, was not among the four Toyota executives whose total compensation in the year to March exceeded ¥100 million. Listed Japanese companies must reveal executive pay above ¥100 million starting this year.

Toyota’s best-paid executive was chairman Fujio Cho, with ¥132 million, followed by Toyota Motor North America president Yoshimi Inaba, in the limelight this year when he testified before US Congress over the company’s recall scandal.

Toyota co-vice chairmen Katsuaki Watanabe and Kazuo Okamoto made ¥114 million and ¥108 million, respectively. The other 34 board members, including Toyoda, made an average ¥27.9 million ($311,300).

Among other Japanese auto executives, Honda Motor Co CEO Takanobu Ito took home ¥115 million as the sole executive at Japan’s No.2 automaker making the required disclosure. About a third of that came from Honda’s R&D unit, which he also headed until the end of March.

Nissan Motor Co paid its CEO, Carlos Ghosn, ¥890 million, making him one of the best-paid executives in Japan as well as the global auto industry.